If someone asks you to co-sign a car loan, how fast should you run away?
As fast as your legs will carry you.
I’m telling you—do not, do not, and I repeat, do not co-sign for anybody.
No matter how much they beg. No matter how much they promise. No matter what.
What’s the worst thing that can happen?
I’ll tell you exactly what:
Lenders don’t care that you were just trying to help. They will come after you for the balance.
That means:
If you signed that loan, you are legally responsible. No excuses. No way out.
I see this all the time.
A sweet grandson comes to Grandma.
“Grandma, I just need a little help. I swear, I’ll make every single payment. I promise, promise, promise! Please, Grandma, I can’t get a car without you!”
And what happens?
Now Grandma is stuck. The bank isn’t chasing him. They’re chasing her.
Some people think, “Worst case, I’ll just file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy and wipe it all out.”
Not so fast.
If you own a home with equity, guess what? You’re paying back every single dime of that car loan.
Make good income? The creditors will come after that too.
They’ll garnish your wages, empty your checking account, and haunt you for years.
All because you tried to help someone.
If you truly want to help, give them money as a gift.
But do not co-sign. Ever.
Need a way out?
Just tell them:
“My lawyer banned me from co-signing for life.”
Make something up. Blame it on me. But whatever you do—do NOT sign that loan.
No co-signing. Ever, ever, ever.
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